SlideShare uma empresa Scribd logo
1 de 52
america’s sweetheart
america’s sweetheart
1.True or False. Mary Pickford went into movie
  acting against the support and advice of her family.

2.True or False. Mary Pickford’s films addressed
  social causes of the day.

3.What was Mary Pickford’s involvement in WWI?

4.What was the public’s reaction to Mary when she
  cut her hair?

5.What was “Pickfair”?
lillian gish
broken blossoms
What emotional responses do you have either for or against the
film?

In what ways was the story paradoxical or ironic?

Describe the various relationships between

    men with men

    men with women

    women with women

Is this film worth seeing now? What truths still translate?

What does this movie have to say about evil in the world? What
are the ways people are good and bad?

What are Lucy’s options?

How is “the other” treated?
TWO CENTRAL PROBLEMS
TWO CENTRAL PROBLEMS


One is his boredom at
work.
TWO CENTRAL PROBLEMS


One is his boredom at
work.
Two is the allure of
leisure.
SPORT

more than mere play
competition served as a
great leveler
gave purpose to old
virtues that had appeared
obsolete
   now yielded physical
  rewards
“Fairbanks is a faun who has
been to Sunday School. He
has a pagan body which yields
instantly to any gypsy or
heathen impulse...but he has a
mind reliably furnished with
a full set of morals and
proprieties; he would be a
sympathetic companion for
anybody’s aunt.”
              Booth Tarkington,
      contemporary dramatist
discontent with work and
  loss of power can be
    alleviated through
       consumption
working girls/serial queens

 Serial queen appeared on
 and off the screen as
 healthy, robust, and self-
 reliant, unlike the “sickly
 women” of the past. They
 roamed far and wide
 unchaperoned...breaking
 into new activities
Cut adrift from
conventional family
still locked
into victorian
gentility. very
 modest dress
New revelations of
impressive lineage or
       wealth
Always end in
   marriage
Saved by suitor
 after she gets
  herself into
    trouble
pearl white
    (writer/
producer “perils
  of pauline”
“Nearly all scenario-writers or authors
  for film are men; and men usually
 won’t provide for a girl things to do
that they wouldn’t do themselves. So
  if I want really thrilly action, I ask
   permission to write it in myself.”
“All over the world
  Pearl White’s name
  has become a
  synonym for courage
  and daring…to her,
  leaps over cliffs, and
  dives off decks of
  ocean liners, are as
  prosaic and
  uneventful as her
  morning grapefruit.”
      American Magazine
“At home the moving picture star, who will dare
anything to make her last picture the greatest, reads
 and plays and cooks and eats and primps like any
                   other girl.”
                                Motion Picture Classic
“We don’t want to be
 marble; besides there
 would not be enough
pedestals to go around,
anyway…Why not give
   our men the same
comradeship that many
  of them never find
outside of their clubs?”
 Response to the New York
       State Federation of
 Women’s Clubs objection
      to women as “pals”
mary pickford


“luminous tenderness in a steel
band of gutter ferocity”
             Photoplay Magazine
Gladys Smith/Mary pickford
   America’s sweetheart
w/ DW Griffith @ Biograph
           1909-1912




       Lena and the Geese
1913 w/Broadway great
                David Belasco
at the time, Belasco was better known and
          respected than griffith
w/Adolph zukor @ lasky’s famous players/1914-1918




           Tess of the Storm Country
United Artists/1918
“I always tried to get
laughter into my pictures.
Make them laugh and make
them cry and back to
laughter. What do people
go to the theater for? An
emotional exercise, and no
preachments. I don’t
believe in taking advantage
of someone who comes to
the theatre by teaching
them a lesson. It’s not my
prerogative to teach
anything.”
              Mary Pickford
virtue and vitality
              on screen




championed the
reforms of the
Progressive
movement
virtue and vitality
                   off screen

used celebrity
status as an activist          with Pres. Herbert Hoover



   extensive
   commitment to
   sell liberty bonds

   Motion Picture
   Relief Fund
virtue and vitality
            off screen




Always
chaperoned by
her mother,
Charlotte
virtue and vitality
                on screen

expanded the perimeters of
respectable female behavior far
beyond 19th century standards.
virtue and vitality
                on screen

expanded the perimeters of
respectable female behavior far
beyond 19th century standards.

  the kidnap
virtue and vitality
                on screen

expanded the perimeters of
respectable female behavior far
beyond 19th century standards.

  the kidnap

  cast as foreigner
virtue and vitality
                   on screen

expanded the perimeters of
respectable female behavior far
beyond 19th century standards.

  the kidnap

  cast as foreigner

  primitive
virtue and vitality
                     on screen

expanded the perimeters of respectable
female behavior far beyond 19th century
standards.

   the kidnap

   cast as foreigner

   primitive

   youth

      playful
virtue and vitality
                     on screen

expanded the perimeters of respectable
female behavior far beyond 19th century
standards.

   the kidnap

   cast as foreigner

   primitive

   youth

      playful

      subordinate
virtue and vitality
                     off screen

astute businesswoman

   1909 started at Biograph at
   $10/day

   1914 started at Famous Players
   @ $500/wk

   by 1916 was earning $10,000/
   wk plus %50 of film profits.
   also choose stories, director and
   cast

   by 1918, she partnered with
   Griffith, Fairbanks, and
   Chaplin to form United Artists
virtue and vitality
                 off screen

youth

  “We are our own sculptors.
  Who can deny that passion
  and unkind thoughts show
  on the lines and expressions
  of our faces...young people
  seldom have these vices until
  they start getting old, so I
  love to be with them. The
  impulses of youth are
  natural and good.”

  “No woman can be a success
  on the screen if she dissipates
  even one little bit.”
marriage kept
 exploration of
 sexuality and
  freedom as a
woman properly
 held in check
   and created
    additional
   avenues for
 consumption
sparrows
Compare/contrast Mr. Grimes and Battling
Burrows.

Why does Grimes have a limp?

How do Lucy and Molly deal with their
problems?

Mary consistently defies the men in her life -
why is this defiance tolerated?

Name the ways in which Mary uses her head.

How is Mary’s sexuality contained in this
film? Or, how did her character still uphold
Victorian values?

What is the significance of the film’s ending?
working girl
“Our serial queen meets
more celebrities every week
than her small-town sisters.
Her gowns are perfect
visions of delight. THe story
of her adventures in New
York is a narrative al all the
joys of refined, metropolitan
existence.”

pg 108 - Lary May
Women are my greatest fans because
they se in my vampire the
impersonal vengeance of all their
unavenged wrongs..they have
lacked either the courage or will
power to redress their grievances.
Even downtrodden wives write me
to this effect. And they give me the
greatest compliment: “I know I
should sympathize with the wife,but
I do not.” I am in effect a feminste.”

                          Theda Bara
amnesia

in searching for some way to
graft thi aulity onto
otherwise “good women,”
filmmakers in this early
transition period from
1912-1914 used the device of
amnesia. The heroine loses
her memory and particiates
in forbidden activities free
from responsibility.
a fool there was - 1914


 sex could destroy the social order (Lary May -
 pag 106)
theda bara

popular 1914-1916

Unlike the blond young virgins who came before, Bara was
voluptuous and dark. Press releases protrayed this mysterious
beauty as the daughter of a French nobleman and an Algerian
princess; but in reality she was Theodosia Goodman of
Cincinnati, OH. Her exotic facade allowed the audience to
identify snsual evil with foreigners. Yet iw aws also clear that
she represented the quest for excitement -- and the danger of
taking it too far -- facing bored and anxious urbanites.
her freedom brings her in contact with a wider range of available
males. She also attracts them with sexual allure r - raises the chance
   for an ensuing union based on something other than gentility.
norma talmadge
mary pickford

Mais conteúdo relacionado

Mais procurados

An Inspector Calls revision
An Inspector Calls revisionAn Inspector Calls revision
An Inspector Calls revisionWMarauder
 
An Inspector Calls GCSE
An Inspector Calls GCSEAn Inspector Calls GCSE
An Inspector Calls GCSEsalma8846
 
An Inspector Calls - Character and Theme
An Inspector Calls - Character and ThemeAn Inspector Calls - Character and Theme
An Inspector Calls - Character and ThemeRoss Docherty
 
An inspector calls revision guide
An inspector calls revision guideAn inspector calls revision guide
An inspector calls revision guideJunaid Hussain
 
An Inspector Calls Revision
An Inspector Calls RevisionAn Inspector Calls Revision
An Inspector Calls RevisionM Taylor
 
Gallows Humor, Sick Humor, and Toilet Humor
Gallows Humor, Sick Humor, and Toilet HumorGallows Humor, Sick Humor, and Toilet Humor
Gallows Humor, Sick Humor, and Toilet HumorBernie DeKoven
 
An inspector-calls-revsion-pack
An inspector-calls-revsion-packAn inspector-calls-revsion-pack
An inspector-calls-revsion-packsparkly
 
Beyonce (2)
Beyonce (2)Beyonce (2)
Beyonce (2)ItzFaith
 
An Inspector Calls Revision
An Inspector Calls RevisionAn Inspector Calls Revision
An Inspector Calls Revisionpierrette
 

Mais procurados (17)

Ws presentation 2
Ws presentation 2Ws presentation 2
Ws presentation 2
 
An Inspector Calls revision
An Inspector Calls revisionAn Inspector Calls revision
An Inspector Calls revision
 
Grace Jones_Memoirs
Grace Jones_MemoirsGrace Jones_Memoirs
Grace Jones_Memoirs
 
Mrs Dalloway
Mrs DallowayMrs Dalloway
Mrs Dalloway
 
An Inspector Calls GCSE
An Inspector Calls GCSEAn Inspector Calls GCSE
An Inspector Calls GCSE
 
An Inspector Calls - Character and Theme
An Inspector Calls - Character and ThemeAn Inspector Calls - Character and Theme
An Inspector Calls - Character and Theme
 
An inspector calls revision
An inspector calls revision An inspector calls revision
An inspector calls revision
 
An inspector calls revision guide
An inspector calls revision guideAn inspector calls revision guide
An inspector calls revision guide
 
Chapter 2
Chapter 2Chapter 2
Chapter 2
 
An Inspector Calls Revision
An Inspector Calls RevisionAn Inspector Calls Revision
An Inspector Calls Revision
 
Gallows Humor, Sick Humor, and Toilet Humor
Gallows Humor, Sick Humor, and Toilet HumorGallows Humor, Sick Humor, and Toilet Humor
Gallows Humor, Sick Humor, and Toilet Humor
 
Class 17
Class 17Class 17
Class 17
 
An inspector-calls-revsion-pack
An inspector-calls-revsion-packAn inspector-calls-revsion-pack
An inspector-calls-revsion-pack
 
Beyonce (2)
Beyonce (2)Beyonce (2)
Beyonce (2)
 
AIC Character Notes
AIC Character NotesAIC Character Notes
AIC Character Notes
 
An Inspector Calls Revision
An Inspector Calls RevisionAn Inspector Calls Revision
An Inspector Calls Revision
 
Revision Sheet
Revision SheetRevision Sheet
Revision Sheet
 

Destaque

Lecture 10 comedy is king
Lecture 10   comedy is kingLecture 10   comedy is king
Lecture 10 comedy is kingUN11
 
Lecture 9 chaplin
Lecture 9   chaplinLecture 9   chaplin
Lecture 9 chaplinUN11
 
Lecture 7 america's sweetheart
Lecture 7   america's sweetheartLecture 7   america's sweetheart
Lecture 7 america's sweetheartUN11
 
VIEW 2012 Workshop - Facebook
VIEW 2012 Workshop - FacebookVIEW 2012 Workshop - Facebook
VIEW 2012 Workshop - FacebookNick Short
 
Mobile learning 1st march 2012
Mobile learning 1st march 2012Mobile learning 1st march 2012
Mobile learning 1st march 2012Nick Short
 
Lecture 11 valentino
Lecture 11   valentinoLecture 11   valentino
Lecture 11 valentinoUN11
 
Lecture 11 valentino
Lecture 11   valentinoLecture 11   valentino
Lecture 11 valentinoUN11
 
Lecture 9 chaplin
Lecture 9   chaplinLecture 9   chaplin
Lecture 9 chaplinUN11
 
Lecture 12 art and industry
Lecture 12   art and industryLecture 12   art and industry
Lecture 12 art and industryUN11
 

Destaque (9)

Lecture 10 comedy is king
Lecture 10   comedy is kingLecture 10   comedy is king
Lecture 10 comedy is king
 
Lecture 9 chaplin
Lecture 9   chaplinLecture 9   chaplin
Lecture 9 chaplin
 
Lecture 7 america's sweetheart
Lecture 7   america's sweetheartLecture 7   america's sweetheart
Lecture 7 america's sweetheart
 
VIEW 2012 Workshop - Facebook
VIEW 2012 Workshop - FacebookVIEW 2012 Workshop - Facebook
VIEW 2012 Workshop - Facebook
 
Mobile learning 1st march 2012
Mobile learning 1st march 2012Mobile learning 1st march 2012
Mobile learning 1st march 2012
 
Lecture 11 valentino
Lecture 11   valentinoLecture 11   valentino
Lecture 11 valentino
 
Lecture 11 valentino
Lecture 11   valentinoLecture 11   valentino
Lecture 11 valentino
 
Lecture 9 chaplin
Lecture 9   chaplinLecture 9   chaplin
Lecture 9 chaplin
 
Lecture 12 art and industry
Lecture 12   art and industryLecture 12   art and industry
Lecture 12 art and industry
 

Mais de UN11

Lecture 7 america's sweetheart
Lecture 7   america's sweetheartLecture 7   america's sweetheart
Lecture 7 america's sweetheartUN11
 
Lecture 10 comedy is king
Lecture 10   comedy is kingLecture 10   comedy is king
Lecture 10 comedy is kingUN11
 
Lecture 12 art and industry
Lecture 12   art and industryLecture 12   art and industry
Lecture 12 art and industryUN11
 
Lecture 8 de mille's consumer
Lecture 8   de mille's consumerLecture 8   de mille's consumer
Lecture 8 de mille's consumerUN11
 
Lecture 8 de mille's consumer
Lecture 8   de mille's consumerLecture 8   de mille's consumer
Lecture 8 de mille's consumerUN11
 
Lecture 11 valentino
Lecture 11   valentinoLecture 11   valentino
Lecture 11 valentinoUN11
 

Mais de UN11 (6)

Lecture 7 america's sweetheart
Lecture 7   america's sweetheartLecture 7   america's sweetheart
Lecture 7 america's sweetheart
 
Lecture 10 comedy is king
Lecture 10   comedy is kingLecture 10   comedy is king
Lecture 10 comedy is king
 
Lecture 12 art and industry
Lecture 12   art and industryLecture 12   art and industry
Lecture 12 art and industry
 
Lecture 8 de mille's consumer
Lecture 8   de mille's consumerLecture 8   de mille's consumer
Lecture 8 de mille's consumer
 
Lecture 8 de mille's consumer
Lecture 8   de mille's consumerLecture 8   de mille's consumer
Lecture 8 de mille's consumer
 
Lecture 11 valentino
Lecture 11   valentinoLecture 11   valentino
Lecture 11 valentino
 

Lecture 7 america's sweetheart

  • 2. america’s sweetheart 1.True or False. Mary Pickford went into movie acting against the support and advice of her family. 2.True or False. Mary Pickford’s films addressed social causes of the day. 3.What was Mary Pickford’s involvement in WWI? 4.What was the public’s reaction to Mary when she cut her hair? 5.What was “Pickfair”?
  • 4. broken blossoms What emotional responses do you have either for or against the film? In what ways was the story paradoxical or ironic? Describe the various relationships between men with men men with women women with women Is this film worth seeing now? What truths still translate? What does this movie have to say about evil in the world? What are the ways people are good and bad? What are Lucy’s options? How is “the other” treated?
  • 6. TWO CENTRAL PROBLEMS One is his boredom at work.
  • 7. TWO CENTRAL PROBLEMS One is his boredom at work. Two is the allure of leisure.
  • 8. SPORT more than mere play competition served as a great leveler gave purpose to old virtues that had appeared obsolete now yielded physical rewards
  • 9. “Fairbanks is a faun who has been to Sunday School. He has a pagan body which yields instantly to any gypsy or heathen impulse...but he has a mind reliably furnished with a full set of morals and proprieties; he would be a sympathetic companion for anybody’s aunt.” Booth Tarkington, contemporary dramatist
  • 10. discontent with work and loss of power can be alleviated through consumption
  • 11. working girls/serial queens Serial queen appeared on and off the screen as healthy, robust, and self- reliant, unlike the “sickly women” of the past. They roamed far and wide unchaperoned...breaking into new activities
  • 12.
  • 15. New revelations of impressive lineage or wealth
  • 16. Always end in marriage Saved by suitor after she gets herself into trouble
  • 17. pearl white (writer/ producer “perils of pauline” “Nearly all scenario-writers or authors for film are men; and men usually won’t provide for a girl things to do that they wouldn’t do themselves. So if I want really thrilly action, I ask permission to write it in myself.”
  • 18. “All over the world Pearl White’s name has become a synonym for courage and daring…to her, leaps over cliffs, and dives off decks of ocean liners, are as prosaic and uneventful as her morning grapefruit.” American Magazine
  • 19. “At home the moving picture star, who will dare anything to make her last picture the greatest, reads and plays and cooks and eats and primps like any other girl.” Motion Picture Classic
  • 20. “We don’t want to be marble; besides there would not be enough pedestals to go around, anyway…Why not give our men the same comradeship that many of them never find outside of their clubs?” Response to the New York State Federation of Women’s Clubs objection to women as “pals”
  • 21. mary pickford “luminous tenderness in a steel band of gutter ferocity” Photoplay Magazine
  • 22.
  • 23. Gladys Smith/Mary pickford America’s sweetheart
  • 24. w/ DW Griffith @ Biograph 1909-1912 Lena and the Geese
  • 25. 1913 w/Broadway great David Belasco at the time, Belasco was better known and respected than griffith
  • 26. w/Adolph zukor @ lasky’s famous players/1914-1918 Tess of the Storm Country
  • 28. “I always tried to get laughter into my pictures. Make them laugh and make them cry and back to laughter. What do people go to the theater for? An emotional exercise, and no preachments. I don’t believe in taking advantage of someone who comes to the theatre by teaching them a lesson. It’s not my prerogative to teach anything.” Mary Pickford
  • 29. virtue and vitality on screen championed the reforms of the Progressive movement
  • 30. virtue and vitality off screen used celebrity status as an activist with Pres. Herbert Hoover extensive commitment to sell liberty bonds Motion Picture Relief Fund
  • 31. virtue and vitality off screen Always chaperoned by her mother, Charlotte
  • 32. virtue and vitality on screen expanded the perimeters of respectable female behavior far beyond 19th century standards.
  • 33. virtue and vitality on screen expanded the perimeters of respectable female behavior far beyond 19th century standards. the kidnap
  • 34. virtue and vitality on screen expanded the perimeters of respectable female behavior far beyond 19th century standards. the kidnap cast as foreigner
  • 35. virtue and vitality on screen expanded the perimeters of respectable female behavior far beyond 19th century standards. the kidnap cast as foreigner primitive
  • 36. virtue and vitality on screen expanded the perimeters of respectable female behavior far beyond 19th century standards. the kidnap cast as foreigner primitive youth playful
  • 37. virtue and vitality on screen expanded the perimeters of respectable female behavior far beyond 19th century standards. the kidnap cast as foreigner primitive youth playful subordinate
  • 38. virtue and vitality off screen astute businesswoman 1909 started at Biograph at $10/day 1914 started at Famous Players @ $500/wk by 1916 was earning $10,000/ wk plus %50 of film profits. also choose stories, director and cast by 1918, she partnered with Griffith, Fairbanks, and Chaplin to form United Artists
  • 39.
  • 40. virtue and vitality off screen youth “We are our own sculptors. Who can deny that passion and unkind thoughts show on the lines and expressions of our faces...young people seldom have these vices until they start getting old, so I love to be with them. The impulses of youth are natural and good.” “No woman can be a success on the screen if she dissipates even one little bit.”
  • 41.
  • 42.
  • 43. marriage kept exploration of sexuality and freedom as a woman properly held in check and created additional avenues for consumption
  • 44. sparrows Compare/contrast Mr. Grimes and Battling Burrows. Why does Grimes have a limp? How do Lucy and Molly deal with their problems? Mary consistently defies the men in her life - why is this defiance tolerated? Name the ways in which Mary uses her head. How is Mary’s sexuality contained in this film? Or, how did her character still uphold Victorian values? What is the significance of the film’s ending?
  • 45. working girl “Our serial queen meets more celebrities every week than her small-town sisters. Her gowns are perfect visions of delight. THe story of her adventures in New York is a narrative al all the joys of refined, metropolitan existence.” pg 108 - Lary May
  • 46. Women are my greatest fans because they se in my vampire the impersonal vengeance of all their unavenged wrongs..they have lacked either the courage or will power to redress their grievances. Even downtrodden wives write me to this effect. And they give me the greatest compliment: “I know I should sympathize with the wife,but I do not.” I am in effect a feminste.” Theda Bara
  • 47. amnesia in searching for some way to graft thi aulity onto otherwise “good women,” filmmakers in this early transition period from 1912-1914 used the device of amnesia. The heroine loses her memory and particiates in forbidden activities free from responsibility.
  • 48. a fool there was - 1914 sex could destroy the social order (Lary May - pag 106)
  • 49. theda bara popular 1914-1916 Unlike the blond young virgins who came before, Bara was voluptuous and dark. Press releases protrayed this mysterious beauty as the daughter of a French nobleman and an Algerian princess; but in reality she was Theodosia Goodman of Cincinnati, OH. Her exotic facade allowed the audience to identify snsual evil with foreigners. Yet iw aws also clear that she represented the quest for excitement -- and the danger of taking it too far -- facing bored and anxious urbanites.
  • 50. her freedom brings her in contact with a wider range of available males. She also attracts them with sexual allure r - raises the chance for an ensuing union based on something other than gentility.

Notas do Editor

  1. \n
  2. false - her mother was her manager.\ntrue\nshe sold bonds\nthey didn’t like it\nhome for her and Douglas Fairbanks\n\n\n
  3. Griffith’s Birth of a Nation - raped by a black man; Broken Blossoms - Cheng Huan Buddhist missionary - saves Lillian from her drunken father who regularly beats her. She is the suffering, virtuous heroine in need of saving - often at the hands of dangerous men.\n
  4. \n
  5. Like Henry Walthal - he was oppressed by the thought of work.\nHe is the “son” of Victorian parents - he ought to have the same work ethic, but work does not hold the same sense of satisfaction. (How is this resolved in THE AVENGING CONSCIENCE? a benevolent parent and turns out girl is more virtuous than originally thought)\nInstead - consumption is where he finds his greatest fulfillment. He’s not supposed to. Repeatedly, his character resolves this by.\n
  6. Like Henry Walthal - he was oppressed by the thought of work.\nHe is the “son” of Victorian parents - he ought to have the same work ethic, but work does not hold the same sense of satisfaction. (How is this resolved in THE AVENGING CONSCIENCE? a benevolent parent and turns out girl is more virtuous than originally thought)\nInstead - consumption is where he finds his greatest fulfillment. He’s not supposed to. Repeatedly, his character resolves this by.\n
  7. - now had the added benefit of physical reward.\n
  8. \n
  9. Fairbanks brought a youthful message.\nWhat would the female counterpart to this be?\n
  10. shopgirls, secretaries, teachers\n
  11. The history of serials starts in 1912 when McClure's Ladies World magazine devised a new strategy for building circulation: Each issue of the publication would feature a story about a continuing main character and a motion picture would show her exploits. \n
  12. Almost immediately – film picked up on serials.\nAdrift from conventional family\nPerils of Pauline – Pauline’s guardian dies in the first episode\nThe Adventures of Kathlyn – her father is kidnapped\nNotably – it’s from patriarchal protection that all three heroines are tragically and prematurely separated from\n
  13. \n
  14. Instead of dreaming of doing something on their own – dreamed of being connected to someone powerful. Provided rich fantasy terrain for viewers. Could re-define themselves – always within the context of a new and different family or marriage partner\n
  15. Despite their initial break from home life, heroine’s lives are inevitably circumscribed by familial ties in the end. While they may postpone marriage – it is always the final goal.\n
  16. In reality, some of these women were quite powerful. Pearl White directed episodes and wrote matertial for herself.\n
  17. Pearl White (Perils of Pauline and Exploits of Eloise)\n
  18. \n
  19. Women no longer want to be placed on pedestals\n
  20. \n
  21. Both Douglas Fairbanks and Mary Pickford had a background in legitimate stage – which added legitimacy to their celebrity status. \nMary - is a good girl - surprisingly conservative\n
  22. Born in 1893 in Toronto, Canada to an alcoholic father, who managed a small grocery market. Mother/grandmother - Irish catholic, very strict. But, mother put her on stage at the age of 7. Had ambitions to join David Belasco - famous Broadway director. But, even by 1909, you could make more money in movies.\n
  23. Victorian traditional female - poor peasant girl whose love redeems a young man from his wasted life - turns out she’s actually long lost child of a noble family. Griffith’s actors weren’t named in credits, but the audience noticed her and started referring to her as “the girl with the curls”.\n
  24. 1913 - returned to stage\neventually turned into a film. Here that Adolph Zukor who had been pilfering Broadway stars to bring him into his company, picked Mary Pickford\n
  25. Tess is a rebellious, independent, energetic Cumberland mountain girl who we first see dancing a jig. Tess raises the illegitimate daughter of a friend who is in dire straights. Is not supported by church or community - don’t know her good deed. She is plucky and forthright. When the church elder refuses to baptize Tess’ baby, she sprinkles the infant herself. Leads the farmers - ala Norma Rae. Finally vindicated.\n
  26. \n
  27. Unlike the moralizing of Griffith, Pickford specifically tried to avoid pounding home a moral. Her goal was to entertain. Plucky, buoyant, mobile, could cross boundaries of ethnicity and gender\n
  28. Half the stars appeal lay in her ability to confront the major social problems of the day and resolve them on the personal level. Often overcoming prejudices against women, social class, and issues involving the disadvantaged worker, especially children. The Eternal Grind - abuse of workers (women and children). Tess and the Storm Country - helped organize farmers/tradesmen against an oppressive sheriff (and church elder) \n
  29. WWI traveled extensively to sell liberty bonds. Army named two canons after her and made her an honorary “colonel”. At the end of World War I, Pickford conceived of the Motion Picture Relief Fund, an organization to help financially needy actors.\n
  30. always chaperoned by her mother\n
  31. \n
  32. In Little Peppina and Less Than the Dust - American girl snatched from Victorian home by foreigners. THis gives her an excuse for taking on a different perwonality without guilt. Growing up with gypsies, Italians, Hindus, or Indians, she learns to wear their exotic clothes, assume a swarthy complexion, and participate in public festivals with both men and women.\n
  33. Mary as an Irish, Japanese or Dutch girl who mingles in saloons, dances in New York or embodies exotic qualities of an Asian or European female, complete with bright clothes and a sensual personality.\n
  34. Hearts Adrift - lone survivor on a deserted island when family’s ocean liner crashes. She learns to fish and build a hut. A gentleman also gets shipwrecked. She nurses him back to life. They “get married”. Then his fiance finds him. Come to rescue him. She can’t bring herself to leave the island - throws herself into a volcanoe - price she must pay for confronting traditional model of sexuality and society.\n
  35. People who had grown up with Victorian values were unwilling to use the quest for sexual mutuality as a means for questioning the economy or the class order. So, instead of integrating these forces into a mature identity, they isolate their rebellious impulses into realm of pre-adult responsibility.\n\nRepeatedly, Pickford was the joyous, spontaneous female who brought into her personality that which Victorians had repressed - the playfulness of childhood and adolescent blossoming. - radiant image of girlish beauty - played 16 and 17 year olds well into her late 20s. If she showed more of her body than past stars - it was okay because it was young and innocent.\n
  36. ultimate goal was still marriage. \n
  37. mother did alot of her negotiating.\n
  38. with director maurice Tournier\n
  39. easy to see why she and Douglas Fairbanks got along so well. Her beauty and exercise regimen was widely publicized.\n
  40. Another vehicle for the blending of production and consumption ethic. She was such a hard and virtuous worker - but an equal advocate for defining oneself through purchases\n
  41. So associated with youth - when her mother died, she cut off her hair. Total public outcry. They didn’t want to see her age. But, couldn’t buy her as young woman anymore. Popularity died out.\n
  42. marriage to Douglas Fairbanks - safe exploration of sexuality\nPickfair\n
  43. She is religious, young and abused\nneed money - and lots of it - male still needed to protect and provide - more on her own terms\n
  44. \n
  45. \n
  46. \n
  47. \n
  48. \n
  49. Norma Talmadge - classic exa\n
  50. \n
  51. \n